View Full Version : Why Buy BP Gas Now?
reelapeelin
05-26-2010, 03:44 PM
BP's response to build berms to protect the Gulf shores adjacent to this  gusher (ain't no LEAK!), bring in Super Tankers to control what's loose  and then to stop this flow have been anemic at best...obviously more  could and should have been done to protect these fragile wetlands. 
There is no sense of urgency.
The only way to instill a sense of urgency into these people is to  disrupt their cash flow.
STOP BUYING BP GASOLINE TODAY!
It's time to  do SOMETHING that'll stick it to these corporate jerks and pinchin' off  their $$$ is the only thing they'll understand.
nipper
05-26-2010, 04:25 PM
Strangely enough, BP gas is by far the cheapest gas in Indianapolis right now.  Coincidence?  I think not.
Destroyer
05-26-2010, 06:49 PM
Strangely enough, BP gas is by far the cheapest gas in Indianapolis right now. Coincidence? I think not.
 
Now that's wierd, because gas around here is $2.59 a gal for reg, BUT BP gas is $2.89 a gal ... exactly the opposite. :head:
 
 
Reel, I feel your pain, and believe me I'm mad as hell about the responses of the company and the government. Instead of finger pointing they should have been on this thing as soon as it was known that there was a leak. MY GOD MAN...WHAT WERE THEY THINKING???? Having said that I'm not sure that stopping a cash flow to a company that is spending millions and millions of dollars daily is such a good thing. Let them stop the leak first... then bankrupt them with lawsuits.  Hell, if it's one thing we've proven over and over is we're great at suing people and companies.
fromthedepths
05-26-2010, 07:52 PM
i boycott BP , everyone always talks about if we dont buy gas for a day then it would drop the price of gas. that's a load of crap .but...... if we were to not buy gas from a single dealer"BP" i'm sure it would a dent in their wallets.they have everything screwed up like a football bat down here .our fisheries our gonna be screwed up for years over this mess.snapper season opens next week but i'm not going ,i dont want to take the chance.
nipper
05-27-2010, 08:04 AM
Sorry about your gas prices in Jersey, Destroyer.  BP at $2.38 per gallon today with a Shell station just across the street at $2.54.  Shell is generally a little higher around here, but most other stations are around $2.48.
Destroyer
05-27-2010, 10:50 AM
Sorry about your gas prices in Jersey, Destroyer. BP at $2.38 per gallon today with a Shell station just across the street at $2.54. Shell is generally a little higher around here, but most other stations are around $2.48.
 
Again, that's strange... Usually NJ has some of the lowest prices in the Nation...  Ahh well..  at least we're lower than NYC...  they are still paying $2.99 for reg at the "cheap gas" stations...  and over $3 at the branded stations..  so I guess that's something .....At least we don't have to pump our own gas....  <grin>
reelapeelin
05-27-2010, 05:03 PM
Exxon station here at $2.34/gal...long lines at those pumps...BP across the street is at $2.57...no waiting...
randlemanboater
05-27-2010, 06:46 PM
Its always tough for me to decide boycott or no boycott......you want to punish the big corporation, but you don't want to hurt the local guy who owns the station, its not his fault.
macojoe
05-27-2010, 07:57 PM
I would say Boycott in a second!  But I use to work at the gas depot here in RI, for the Shell Co.
You would not believe all the trucks that came in there and filled up!  Shell, Sunoco, JPNoonans, and all kinds of no name trucks. 
Bottom Line you will never stop getting there gas as there stations are just the tip of the iceberg!! They sell it all over the world and in many many names. and forms!
As much as I hate to say it fines and suits are the way to go.
Genie Aye
05-28-2010, 01:06 AM
BP is the second largest oil, natural gas, alternative fuels company in the world, that said. 
You need to know where your gas is coming from in your area--example:seattle--all gas comes out of Arco(BP)
or texaco
Portland---Exxon is where all the gas comes from.
 
It does not matter what station you buy it from, there is generally only one facility in a area wholesaling fuel and the difference is only the additive package in the gas (Or lack there of).
 
Second---Yes there is a mega mess made out there, but there was some regulatory people from the feds that did not make them install some saftey equipment on the line--so it would not have even happened---so thanks FEDS. And next--at 5000' deep--you have to make a plan--then get it all lined up and supplies and people and then out there to handle the issue--and if the first idea does not work--then it is time for the next plan--which takes time to get going as well.
 
5000' equals 150 atmospheres of pressure--not like you can just send a diver down there--this has to all be done by remote with subs--and it probabley took several days just to get one of them there and under contract.
Ya it is a bummer about all the pollution and damage being done--But I do not think they want it happening either---after all--the loser Feds are probing every orrifice of their bodies right now--they need to let them get it shut off and then probe them!
 
Remember it was a explosion that made it happen---not like some skipper running aground on a reef that they had been going by for years that everyone knows about.
 
Gas up here---if lucky you might find decent gas for 2.93 a gallon.
Destroyer
05-28-2010, 11:24 AM
Ya it is a bummer about all the pollution and damage being done--But I do not think they want it happening either---after all--the loser Feds are probing every orrifice of their bodies right now--they need to let them get it shut off and then probe them!
 
Remember it was a explosion that made it happen---not like some skipper running aground on a reef that they had been going by for years that everyone knows about.
 
Gas up here---if lucky you might find decent gas for 2.93 a gallon.
 
All of what you say is correct and accurate...BUT..  as it's coming to light, BP was pumping seawater, not mud, in an effort to hold down drilling costs..  They, as much as anyone else, caused the accident in the first place.  The feds were not out there on the rig, and, while I hate the present administration, I have a hard time blaming them or the previous administration for this accident.  It was caused by BP taking shortcuts that cost 11 people their lives.
 
Let them fix the problem, then suck them dry with lawsuits.  Hell, if I was a boater in that area I'd be starting a class action just for them depriving me of my fishing grounds.  Hang em' I say.
regidog
05-28-2010, 11:29 AM
Guys, this thing has got me sick, boycotting is the immediate response, but as many have said these stations are not necessarily carrying their own brand.  The real issue for me is the lack of a emergency response, these companies understand the ramifications of an error like this, they should have had every emergency scenario ironed out before they put a hole in the mud.  It was only a matter of time before this happened.  
I am thinking they likely could have closed it up right away but for the sake of losing the well and the associated investment they thought they could salvage it, hence the delay in the response and lack of media coverage in the first two weeks.
Now my biggest fear is that while this underwater volcanoe is gushing it's wallowing/compromising the surrounding area of the ocean flow, which if it fails God only knows how they will stop it from flowing!!!
valiant_200
06-03-2010, 12:55 AM
I have never bought BP gas. Back in the day, we used to call the local BP station the "Water Works" because their gas was so weak and crappy.
I have a particular bone to pick with all of them because I DO live in the area affected by the gusher, and I am far from alone. Feelings of anger and hopelessness fill the air. If you could see the meetings with the fishermen down here, you would see how angry they all are. 
Imagine if something like this happened in the waters where you fish and boat and, as a result, fishing season was totally closed in your area. You would be pissed, no? 
Honestly, having seen some of these meetings, I have to wonder when the pitchforks and torches will come out for real.
reelapeelin
06-03-2010, 05:35 AM
I have never bought BP gas. Back in the day, we used to call the local BP station the "Water Works" because their gas was so weak and crappy.
I have a particular bone to pick with all of them because I DO live in the area affected by the gusher, and I am far from alone. Feelings of anger and hopelessness fill the air. If you could see the meetings with the fishermen down here, you would see how angry they all are. 
Imagine if something like this happened in the waters where you fish and boat and, as a result, fishing season was totally closed in your area. You would be pissed, no? 
Honestly, having seen some of these meetings, I have to wonder when the pitchforks and torches will come out for real.
Valiant, the pictures I see on TV make me physically SICK...and it's only getting started...all these half-@$$ed attempts thus far are designed to only show, "we're doing something" until the so-called "relief" wells can be put in place and keep that well productive...not if, but when the oil starts flowing along the FL coast and eventually up the east coast, your pain will be felt by many more...I'm glad to see criminal charges are being investigated against individuals at BP, but I also believe there are certain individuals inside the US government who should be held accountable too...this disaster was forseeable  and preventable...if you loosen the checkbooks for a bunch of engineers, they CAN develop a way to extract this oil SAFELY...this trajedy didn't have to happen...and I don't believe for one second that everything's being done to STOP that gusher or soak up all the oil that's been loosed on that beautiful, vital ecology down there... :bat:
HookedOnMarsh
06-07-2010, 08:36 PM
Dusting off my pitchfork now. Where do we meet up? :bat:
With all that oil and dead birds, we ought to easily be able to tar and feather all those BP ba$$tards!:bat:
reelapeelin
06-08-2010, 06:42 AM
Dusting off my pitchfork now. Where do we meet up? :bat:
With all that oil and dead birds, we ought to easily be able to tar and feather all those BP ba$$tards!:bat:
BP could start by firing Tony Heyward's little sniveling @$$...kick his limey-@$$ to the curb and then let him get his life back...he said there would only be "minimal" damage the the local environment...my @$$...he needs some "minimal" damage upside his punkin-head...:bat:
Steplift 72'
06-15-2010, 09:41 AM
Agreed. Start at the top with the board members and officers of the corporation, that's where underfunded projects originate. Take a well known procedure and have smart and qualified people stretched to the limits by cutting budgets beyond what they know is feasible. That's a recipe for disaster on land, much more likely off the continental shelf. Problem is that in court a board member is well removed from actual nuts and bolts of exploration and production. That's their story and they'll stick to it. I believe criminal charges will follow for ignoring best practices and cutting corners. Unfortunately it will be middle management and front line supervision that takes the fall. Some smart attorneys need to be working the improbable budget cutting angle. I'm on the Gulf Coast of Louisiana, we still have good water over here for now. Meetings are scheduled locally to discuss the potential for oil getting over here near the Texas state line. I'm a bit closer than most, looking at the gulf now. Yeah, I'll sign onto the lawsuit, this is criminal in my opinion.
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